Chapter 4 - Seeks Revenge
In the fall of the year I made my headquarters in the city where my brother was preaching,
Securing rooms in a hotel only a few blocks from the parsonage. My sister-in-law and her mother
seemed quite displeased that I should be so near a neighbor, but I made it a point to see but
little of them and conceal from them my knowledge of their distaste for me. Meanwhile I took a
devoted friend into my confidence, and, without the young doctor suspecting it, kept a close eye
on his actions and found plenty of material to confirm the fears I had for sometime harbored.
Up to this time, wicked as I had been, I had never taken a human life or felt any desire to
do so. As I have already said, I had become a gambler. I had stolen my employer's time and in
representing my goods and settling up accounts with the firm for which I labored and their
various customers with whom I dealt, I had not been strictly honest and yet I by no means looked
upon myself as a this but my heart was hard and wicked and bitter hatred was rising in me and I
could feel the spirit of murder taking possession of me. I had secured a pistol which I carried
constantly and, frequently passing the young doctor's office, I felt like stepping in and
shooting him down at his desk.
If I could have induced my brother to leave his wife, I would have cheerfully given every
dollar I had to have taken him to any part of the country or over the seas or anywhere to get
him entirely away from her and her influence and the disgrace that I felt, sooner or later, she
would bring upon him. But knowing his love for her, I never breathed a hint of my suspicious to
him. Frequently I would be out of the city for weeks and sometimes months at a time and my mind
would become somewhat relieved on The subject that agitated and enraged me, but on my return
my confidential friend would tell me of things that had occurred during my absence end would
throw me into a frenzy of anger and yet neither of us were positive that I would be justified in
shooting the wretched man on the basis of the unwritten law.
The next summer John's wife again went away to the watering place, the young physician went
up and spent his summer vacation and I drifted along in his wake and looked with venomous eye on
his devoted attentions to the beautiful, silly woman, who was breaking my innocent brother's
heart. John was so devotedly in love that he was quite blinded to the faults of his wife and yet
her treatment of him had become such that he had been forced to conclude that she had no real
affection for him.
I shall not go into the details of what followed, but suffice it to say that directly after
my sister-in-law's return from the summer resort, my brother went away from home to spend a week
at a religious convention. My confidential friend sent me a telegram to come at once to the city.
He met me and we talked together and arrangements were made. That evening, which I remember with
a shudder in my poor soul, my friend and myself went to the parsonage, it being near midnight. I
crept quietly to a back porch where a back door led to an alley way. At a given moment, my
friend rang the door bell violently; all was quiet. He rang again and then beat with his fists
upon the door. I heard a noise in the house and directly the young physician, with his coat on
his arm and his shoes in his hand glided from the back door on to the porch. I had an electric
flashlight in my hand and threw the glare of it in his face. I shall never forget his startled
look as he recognized me. No word was spoken; it all occurred in an instant. The electric light
was in my left hand, the forty-four in my right, and there was a tremendous crash. The muzzle
was within a few feet of the poor fellow's left breast, and he sank to the floor without a word.
I ran rapidly through the alley and down a back street for three blocks, came out quietly
into the street with a cigarette in my mouth, entered the hotel at the side door and went up a
back stairway, threw off my clothing and leaped into bed and assumed to be sound asleep when
some one beat on my door and said there was a telephone call for me to come instantly to the
parsonage, my brother's residence. I dressed hastily, ran to the telephone, and called up to
know if anyone was sick. My brother's mother-in-law said: "For mercy sake come quickly and bring
a physician with you if you can find one convenient." I left word with the night clerk to send
the hotel doctor around at once, and ran to the house. I found my sister-in-law fainting with
hysterics, her mother wild with excitement. They said an awful murder had been committed on the
back porch. They supposed that possibly two burglars had met there and fought with each other,
that they heard a pistol shot and the mother-in-law looking out of the window could see the dead
man in his shirt sleeves without his shoes on. She supposed he must have been undertaking to rob
the house and had been shot dead.
I called for a lantern and going out with the doctor, who had by this time arrived, turned
the unfortunate man over and the mother-in-law, who had followed me, screamed out, "Why it is Dr.
George Prater!" The coroner was summoned, the undertaker was called, and the next morning a
little after daylight the dead body was taken away. I telephoned my brother to come home at once
and I shell never forget the look or his sad, white face when he came. His wife was in a
hysterical condition, he did all he could to solace her but she refused to be comforted. A few
days later she was sent to a sanitarium and my brother, being granted leave of absence from his
church, went away to visit our father.
The newspapers were full of accounts of the tragedy, the reporters indulging in all sorts of
guesswork and imaginations. No one seemed to suspect me of being in any way connected with the
unfortunate affair. The young doctor seemed to have no near relatives in the city and those best
acquainted with him, knowing his character, said that his untimely death was the logical
sequence of the course he had followed, let his blood be upon his own head, and so there was no
special effort put forth to ascertain the cause of his death, or who was the perpetrator of the
deed.
Being a little afraid to hasten away lest I should be suspected, I remained in the city for
several weeks and flattered myself that I succeeded in wearing an air of perfect innocence.
Afterward I went about my business as usual, traveling here, there and yonder, and carrying with
me a load much heavier than I had anticipated as I had thought over the matter. As I lay awake
many nights reflecting over the matter, I thought of many better ways out of the trouble than
the one I had chosen. I condemned myself for my action upon the ground that the woman was not
worth the price I had paid in seeking vengeance for my brother. I deeply regretted that I had not
left the family to their fate trusting my brother in the merciful hands, of the Christ he loved
instead of madly determining to blot out the life of a fellow-being.
The thought of this tragedy has haunted me through the years. Sometimes I have almost
succeeded in convincing myself that I did right, but then my better judgment, like a rising tide,
would sweep away the frail barriers that I had tried to build, and I would again have to admit
my unwisdom and the great wickedness of my action. I grew restless and found that I was
incapable of attending to business and would hurry from town to town and city to city, hardly
taking time to show my samples or to take orders from the merchants who desired to purchase
goods from the firm I represented.
I had resigned my position and was making arrangements to join Gomez in Cuba and help the
patriots in their struggles against the Spaniards, when war was declared against Spain. I at
once joined a volunteer regiment and was thoroughly glad that my regiment was ordered to the
front, hoping that in the excitement of battle and becoming familiar with death, would have the
effect of quieting my anxieties and relieving my mind of the distress which had fastened upon me
because of the sad tragedy that now hung as a black cloud over my life.
The excitement attending our landing in a new country, the strange and interesting
surroundings, the effect of marching, the thrill of battle, the benumbing influences of walking
about among dead men, did very much to occupy my mind and, for the time, I found not a little
relief from the gaunt specter that haunted me. Sometimes I felt like it would be best to so
expose myself that I would be killed, at other times I was inclined to rush headlong into all
manner of sin and try, if possible, to so harden my heart that I would be without feeling, and
then again, I would wonder if it was possible for me to repent and find that pardon I had once
enjoyed, but in these better moments the skeptical teachings that I had imbibed from my
unbelieving teachers in college would rise up and chill my soul, and I would hope that after all
we were all only well developed apes, hardly responsible for what we did. And thus I was tossed
about twixt hopes and fears. Although I laughed loud, and recklessly, I was a very unhappy man.